farisbueller:

felicefawn:

The fact that the majority of teenagers would rather listen to Justin Bieber or Taylor Momsen over Jimi Hendrix or Pink Floyd makes me want to fucking kill myself. Literally.

up next on MTV’s “White Girl Problems”: special snowflake and part-time tumblr user felicefawn is literally contemplating suicide over people having different music taste than her and thinks she is better than everybody else because she kinda sorta knows who jimi hendrix and pink floyd are

(via prof-plum)

Source: felicefawn

Originally from Felice Fawn

me in this heat

me in this heat

(via stateofreflux)

Source: jledbetter

Originally from Working jobs you hate to buy shit you don't need.

babybatterwitch:

babybatterwitch:

neopiacentral:

what do you call a cow with a twitch

beef jerky

what do you call a cow that just gave birth

decalfinated 

what do you call a cow with no legs

ground beef

what do you call a cow with no left legs

lean beef

(via neopiacentral)

Source: neopiacentral

Originally from

animationtidbits:

My Neighbor Totoro - Totoro Designs (More at Living Lines)

(via sparkysparky-boomman)

Source: livlily.blogspot.com

Originally from Animation Tidbits

(via quinsee)

Source: moonlightstrike

Originally from Nostalgic Dreams

(via sp0radic)

View in high-resolution

Source: pmaalllday

Originally from positive mental attitude all day

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

unclenicky:

(via supernova-skyline)

Source: unclenicky

Originally from Welcome to the inside of my mind

(via quinsee)

View in high-resolution

Source: matthejew

Originally from matthejew

theatlantic:

The Invisible Borders That Define American Culture

One of the clearest regional differences in the U.S. can found by tracking the words people use to refer to soft drinks, which is in fact the map you saw at the top of this story. Pop or soda, or even Coke, these small linguistic differences are not as small as we might think. While “soda” commands the Northeast and West Coast (green) and “pop” is in between (black), “Coke” reigns in the south (turquoise). These small distinctions can often act as touchstones for larger cultural differences.
Read more. [Image: Samuel Arbesman]

theatlantic:

The Invisible Borders That Define American Culture

One of the clearest regional differences in the U.S. can found by tracking the words people use to refer to soft drinks, which is in fact the map you saw at the top of this story. Pop or soda, or even Coke, these small linguistic differences are not as small as we might think. While “soda” commands the Northeast and West Coast (green) and “pop” is in between (black), “Coke” reigns in the south (turquoise). These small distinctions can often act as touchstones for larger cultural differences.

Read more. [Image: Samuel Arbesman]

(via blackmormon)

View in high-resolution

Source: theatlanticcities.com

Originally from The Atlantic

Break-Up Lines

(via blackmormon)

Source: darnitmeritme

Originally from Demetri Martin Appreciation

my life goal is to buy out an entire concert and then the artist will come on stage so dramatically and it will just be me sitting there like image

(via sparkysparky-boomman)

Source: tridant

Originally from LE-SMOKE

mrcraabs:

roses are red

violets are blue

sunflowers are yellow

i bet you were expecting something romantic but no this is just gardening facts

(via sparkysparky-boomman)

Source: mrcraabs

Originally from hello

patkirch:

i bet autocorrect was invented in he’ll

(via prof-plum)

Source: patkirch

Originally from untangle me

offendpoppunk:

(via waxxx)

Source: offendpoppunk

Originally from what are we defending pop punk against

laugh-all-night:

i will never forgive jamie lynn spears for getting pregnant and ruining zoey 101

(via blackmormon)

Source: blainiacs

Originally from now my life is sweet like cinnamon